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Handle the three most common types of fire—those involving wood and paper, liquids and gases, and electrical equipment.
Fight flammable liquid, gas, grease, and electrical fires.
Douse fires from combustibles such as wood, paper, cloth, and rubber.
Suppress extremely hot reflashing fires involving combustible oil and grease.
Smother flames from combustible-metal fires involving magnesium, sodium, potassium, uranium, and powdered aluminum.
Secure fire extinguishers inside vehicles for easy access in emergencies.
Set your extinguisher in this stand when mounting is not an option.
Control access to fire extinguishers and guard against theft and vandalism.
A buzzer sounds when the extinguisher is removed from its storage position, discouraging theft and vandalism.
Keep dust and dirt off your fire extinguishers.
These sprinkler heads react to heat up to five times faster than other sprinkler heads.
Install these cover plates at the same time as a new sprinkler head.
Snap these two-piece covers around existing sprinkler heads without having to disassemble or drain the system.
Keep ready-to-use replacement sprinkler heads handy.
Protect sprinkler heads from damage and tampering.
Prevent water from spraying without having to shut down the entire sprinkler system.
Use these sprinkler heads for low-profile fire safety.
An inconspicuous cover plate provides a clean look for sprinkler heads. When the plate's temperature rating is reached, it falls away to expose the sprinkler head.
Tags are laminated in plastic or aluminum so they hold up outdoors.
These tags are stamped with "SEALED" and are numbered consecutively, starting with a random number.
Specify a message and starting number.
Seal valves, latches, containers, and other devices with these traceable, tamper-evident tags, which are designed for food, pharmaceutical, and other sanitary environments.
Pressurize air for sprinkler systems. These compressors turn on when the tank falls to the activation pressure and they turn off when the tank reaches the maximum pressure.